forward masking
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Popov ◽  
Dmitry Nechaev ◽  
Alexander Ya. Supin ◽  
Evgeniya Sysueva

Forward masking was investigated by the auditory evoked potentials (AEP) method in a bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus using stimulation by two successive acoustic pulses (the masker and test) projected from spatially separated sources. The positions of the two sound sources either coincided with or were symmetrical relative to the head axis at azimuths from 0 to ±90°. AEPs were recorded either from the vertex or from the lateral head surface next to the auditory meatus. In the last case, the test source was ipsilateral to the recording side, whereas the masker source was either ipsi- or contralateral. For lateral recording, AEP release from masking (recovery) was slower for the ipsi- than for the contralateral masker source position. For vertex recording, AEP recovery was equal both for the coinciding positions of the masker and test sources and for their symmetrical positions relative to the head axis. The data indicate that at higher levels of the auditory system of the dolphin, binaural convergence makes the forward masking nearly equal for ipsi- and contralateral positions of the masker and test.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte Garcia ◽  
John M. Deeks ◽  
Tobias Goehring ◽  
Daniele Borsetto ◽  
Manohar Bance ◽  
...  

Objectives: Electrically-Evoked Compound Action-Potentials (ECAPs) can be recorded using the electrodes in a cochlear implant (CI) and represent the synchronous responses of the electrically-stimulated auditory-nerve. ECAPs can be obtained using a forward-masking method that measures the neural response to a probe and masker electrode separately and in combination. The Panoramic ECAP (PECAP) method measures ECAPs using multiple combinations of masker and probe electrodes and uses a nonlinear optimization algorithm to estimate current spread from each electrode and neural health along the cochlea. However, the measurement of ECAPs from multiple combinations of electrodes is too time-consuming for use in clinics. This study proposes and evaluates a fast version of the PECAP measurements, SpeedCAP, that minimises recording time by exploiting redundancies between multiple ECAP measures, and that can be applied to methods where multiple ECAPs are required. Design: In the first study, 11 users of Cochlear Limited CIs took part. ECAPs were recorded using the forward-masking artefact-cancellation technique at the most comfortable loudness level (MCL) for every combination of masker and probe electrodes for all active electrodes in the users’ MAPs, as per the standard PECAP recording paradigm. The same current levels and recording parameters were then used to collect ECAPs in the same users with the SpeedCAP method. The ECAP amplitudes were then compared between the two conditions, as were the corresponding estimates of neural health and current spread calculated using the PECAP method described by Garcia et al (2021). The second study measured SpeedCAP intra-operatively in 8 CI patients and with all maskers and probes presented at the same current level to assess feasibility. ECAPs for the subset of conditions where the masker and probe were presented on the same electrode were compared to those obtained using the slower approach leveraged by the standard clinical software. Results: Data collection time was reduced from 45 (PECAP) to 8 (SpeedCAP) minutes. There were no significant differences between normalized root mean squared error (RMSE) repeatability metrics for post-operative PECAP and SpeedCAP data, nor for the RMSEs calculated between PECAP and SpeedCAP data. When between-participant differences were removed, both the neural health (r = 0.73) and current spread (r = 0.65) estimates were significantly correlated (p < 0.0001, df = 218) between SpeedCAP and PECAP conditions across all electrodes. Valid ECAPs were obtained in all patients in the second study, demonstrating intra-operative feasibility of SpeedCAP. No significant differences in RMSEs were detectable between post- and intra-operative ECAP measurements. Conclusions: The improved efficiency of SpeedCAP provides time savings facilitating multi-electrode ECAP recordings in routine clinical practice. The SpeedCAP data collection is sufficiently quick to record intra-operatively, and adds no significant error to the ECAP amplitudes. Such measurements could thereafter be submitted to models such as PECAP to provide patient-specific patterns of neural activation to inform programming of clinical MAPs and/or identify causes of poor performance at the electrode-nerve interface of CI users. The speed and accuracy of these measurements also opens up a wide range of additional research questions to be addressed.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. e0251397
Author(s):  
Léopold Kritly ◽  
Yannick Sluyts ◽  
David Pelegrín-García ◽  
Christ Glorieux ◽  
Monika Rychtáriková

In this work, we study people’s ability to discriminate between different 2D textures of walls by passive listening to a pre-recorded tongue click in an auralized echolocation scenario. In addition, the impact of artificially enhancing the early reflection magnitude by 6dB and of removing the direct component while equalizing the loudness was investigated. Listening test results for different textures, ranging from a flat wall to a staircase, were assessed using a 2 Alternative-Forced-Choice (2AFC) method, in which 14 sighted, untrained participants were indicating 2 equally perceived stimuli out of 3 presented stimuli. The average performance of the listening subjects to discriminate between different textures was found to be significantly higher for walls at 5m distance, without overlap between the reflected and direct sound, compared to the same walls at 0.8m distance. Enhancing the reflections as well as removing the direct sound were found to be beneficial to differentiate textures. This finding highlights the importance of forward masking in the discrimination process. The overall texture discriminability was found to be larger for the walls reflecting with a higher spectral coloration.


Author(s):  
Skyler G. Jennings

This review addresses the putative role of the medial olivocochlear (MOC) reflex on psychophysical masking and intensity resolution in humans. A framework for interpreting psychophysical results in terms of the expected influenced of the MOC reflex is introduced. This framework is used to review the effects of a precursor or contralateral acoustic stimulation on 1) simultaneous masking of brief tones, 2) behavioral estimates of cochlear gain and frequency resolution in forward masking, 3) the build-up and decay of forward masking, and 4) measures of intensity resolution. Support, or lack thereof, for a role of the MOC reflex in psychophysical perception is discussed in terms of studies on estimates of MOC strength from otoacoustic emissions and the effects of resection of the olivocochlear bundle in patients with vestibular neurectomy. Novel, innovative approaches are needed to resolve the dissatisfying conclusion that current results are unable to definitively confirm or refute the role of the MOC reflex in masking and intensity resolution.


2021 ◽  
Vol 149 (3) ◽  
pp. 1764-1771 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Füllgrabe ◽  
Aleksander Sęk ◽  
Brian C. J. Moore

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